4.3 • 1.2K Ratings
🗓️ 5 September 2016
⏱️ 27 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
How does traffic jam? And, why do some people shout into their cellphones in public places? Two subjects guaranteed to annoy even the most patient listeners.
The Phantom Jam Listener Matthew Chandler wrote to us: "I travel on the motorway for work and often I find myself sitting in a traffic jam for ages, thinking there must be roadworks or an accident ahead, then suddenly the jam mysteriously disappears to reveal… nothing! There's no apparent reason whatsoever."
Doctors Rutherford and Fry discover the cause of these phantom jams. Adam ventures on to the M25 in search of a tailback, and Hannah looks at projects around the world designed to thwart traffic tailbacks.
This case features Neal Harwood from the Transport Research Laboratory and BBC technology reporter, Jane Wakefield. Plus a special guest appearance from Greg Marston, aka 'Masdar City Man'.
The Aural Voyeur Listener Daniel Sarano, from New Jersey, asks why people shout on their mobile phones in public: "I have no interest in hearing about people’s private lives. I don’t enjoy the aural voyeurism. If people want to say 'honey I’m running late, be home in 5'. That’s OK, but discussing business or, worse, personal details…. I hate it. The whole idea would have seemed an anathema to older generations. I think they would have considered it rude to talk loudly in public. No sense of that in the 21st Century.”
We discover the answer to this annoying modern habit by delving into the inner workings of telephony. What follows is a tale of engineering rivalry, Victorian etiquette and early otolaryngology. Providing the answers are acoustic technologist Nick Zakarov and historian Greg Jenner, author of 'A Million Years in a Day: A Curious History of Daily Life'.
If you have any everyday mysteries for the team to investigate using the power of science, please email [email protected]
Producer: Michelle Martin
Image: A man on a phone, Credit: Thinkstock
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0:00.0 | Thank you for downloading from the BBC. |
0:03.0 | The details of our complete range of podcasts and our terms of use, |
0:07.0 | go to BBCworldservice.com slash podcasts. |
0:11.0 | Welcome to the curious... broadcasts. |
0:19.0 | Welcome to the curious cases of Rutherford and Fry, where we aim to solve your everyday science mysteries. That is Dr. Hanna-Fry and I am Dr. Adam Rutherford and you can send us your questions, conundrums, |
0:26.0 | queries to curious cases at BBC.co. |
0:30.0 | UK. Indeed. Now again we have two cases for you today. Both of them come under the category of |
0:35.2 | cultural annoyances. Yes they do. Two things that people find a little bit annoying. |
0:40.9 | The first is traffic jams. This is a universal annoyance really isn't it? |
0:45.7 | Nobody likes getting stuck in a traffic jam. That's absolutely correct but I'm |
0:49.7 | possibly the only person who's sought out being stuck in a traffic |
0:52.8 | hunting indeed it's true and I went to the m25 which is the nightmare ring |
0:57.8 | road around London it's a very expensive car park essentially it goes around London but there's not much going |
1:05.8 | around it's just often completely gridlocked and that is what I had to do to find |
1:09.8 | out the answer to this question. Today we bring you the curious case of the Phantom Jam. |
1:22.0 | Dear Doctors Rutherford and Fry, writes Mr Matthew Chandler from Derbyshire. |
1:27.0 | I travel on the motorway for work and I often find myself sitting in traffic jams for ages, |
1:32.0 | thinking that there must be roadworks or an accident ahead, |
1:35.6 | and then suddenly the jam mysteriously disappears to reveal nothing. |
1:40.0 | There's no apparent reason whatsoever. |
1:42.3 | Why? Why indeed? Well, we have pledged to solve your everyday questions using the power of science and solve this one we will. |
1:51.0 | I've got a real treat you. Oh that's very exciting. To really tackle |
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